I agree. If EV's ever become ubiquitous in the US, these benefits would need to go away.
We aren't even close to that here. Republicans have turned electric vehicles into a political issue. That being said, it does make me a bit mad watching someone in a brand new Tesla zoom past me in the HOV lane while I'm stuck in traffic in my '86 Mercedes that I've kept running all these years, burned mostly renewable diesel in (previously waste vegetable oil), and have caused way less emissions given that it was manufactured when I was 3 years old, and not replaced every several years like a typical car is.
I don't think that me driving past you in a city is going to affect you or your children's health in any significant way. My point is a bit more macro than you are making it out to be.
> I don't think that me driving past you in a city is going to affect you or your children's health in any significant way.
Can you stay behind your car while it's running and breath the noxes?
Do you think other people enjoy that?
I have been stuck behind some recently and had to turn on air recirculation.
Of course it is going to affect, it is VERY polluting, 86 is before any pollution norms.
Noxes from diesel are cancer causing and dieselgate was a thing.
> My point is a bit more macro than you are making it out to be.
On a macro level, a city full of your cars is a very polluted and unhealthy one.
A city full of EVs is clean.
So you don't really care about the environment or people, you just like attention.
Another point, 40+ year old cars over here are a rich people hobby, they pay no taxes since they are clasic cars and are very expensive to buy and maintain, if you lived in one of these places you could sell your classic car to some rich person and buy yourself multiple EVs. You can buy second hand and avoid your perceived production pollution.
I already pay $220 /yr to register my EV in Georgia. That's far more than I would pay if I were driving an ICE car. Does this mean that I'd have to pay $420 /yr if this passed?